Menu
The New Contemporary Art Magazine

Olek Joins Forces with Maitri India to Celebrate International Women’s Day

International Women's Day is celebrated on March 8th every year. In different regions, the focus of the celebrations ranges from general celebration of respect, appreciation, and love towards women for their economic, political, and social achievements. To mark the occasion, artist Olek joined forces with humanitarian NGO Maitri in a public art performance in New Delhi, India.

International Women’s Day is celebrated on March 8th every year. In different regions, the focus of the celebrations ranges from general celebration of respect, appreciation, and love towards women for their economic, political, and social achievements. To mark the occasion, artist Olek joined forces with humanitarian NGO Maitri in a public art performance in New Delhi, India.

Last November, Olek was horrified to learn that one-third of men in India, where spousal rape is legal, admit to having forced a sexual act on their wives. The Polish-born street artist, well known for her candy colored crocheted installations featured in Hi-Fructose Vol. 29, had to do something. “I decided to make a statement about it and show my solidarity with women here in Delhi, India and anywhere else in the world,” she shared in an email to Hi-Fructose.

The project used crochet as a medium to demonstrate women’s ability to multi-task, recreate and reinvent themselves. “I started with a solo performance in front of India gate. 
The black ribbon covering my eyes symbolizes how blind the west is to women’s situation in India. Then I moved to Central Park, CP New Delhi, and joined 25 women with various backgrounds in public action.” Her mission with Maitri is to create awareness and bring about change, furthering and improving the rights of women in India.

“We feel passionate about celebrating the power and potential of women and will do this by demonstrating that like art, women can and should always be confidently recreating themselves. Women play an important role in society and in India,” Olek says.

“We were crocheting by unraveling the white aprons in a continuous loop over the course of two hours. The artwork was thus destroyed as it was created, and created out of its own destruction in an infinite circle. Like the perpetual punishments of Sisyphus and Prometheus, a woman’s work is never finished.”

Meta
Share
Facebook
Reddit
Pinterest
Email
Related Articles
Hi-Fructose readers need no introduction to the plethora of artists and galleries that were featured in this year's installment of SCOPE Miami Beach. Known as the biggest worldwide professional show of modern art, 2015 marked the fair's 15th anniversary. Despite heavy rains and winds that led to water seeping into the fair's signature white tent, attendance was higher than ever- roughly 49,000 attended compared to last year's 45,000 attendees. Take a look at more of our highlights from SCOPE Miami Beach after the jump!
Always searching for new applications for her crochet practice (see our coverage of her crocheted train and crocheted boat as well as our extensive feature in Hi-Fructose Vol. 29), Olek recently traveled to the Caribbean for an underwater installation in Isla Mujeres, Mexico.
In October 2015, Hi-Fructose Vol. 29 featured artist Olek visited the Virginia MOCA for a special workshop with community members and to plan a large-scale public artwork on site that will raise awareness about the waters near Virginia Beach. Over the weekend, the New York-based artist's project was unveiled at the opening of Turn the Page: The First Ten Years of Hi-Fructose - a larger than life future New York Times article covering the facade of the museum entrance. Olek's mural, crocheted in a photo-realistic style, imagines our Earth Day headline news in 2020.
GWAR was never an ordinary rock band. And in the recent documentary This Is GWAR, director Scott Barber digs into the past and present of the music and art collective that simultaneously defied categorization while infiltrating late twentieth century pop culture and continues to entertain fans today with heavy metal and elaborate—even gory—stage shows. Read Liz Ohanesian's full article by clicking above.

Subscribe to the Hi-Fructose Mailing List